At least 30 people were killed, including patients, after an airstrike by the country's ruling junta hit a major hospital in Myanmar's western Rakhine state, according to a rebel group, an aid worker and a witness said on Thursday.
More than 70 people were injured, they said.
The hospital in Rakhine's Mrauk U township was struck late on Wednesday by bombs dropped by a military aircraft, said Khine Thu Kha, a spokesman for the Arakan Army, which is battling the ruling junta along parts of the coastal state.
"The Mrauk U General Hospital was completely destroyed," Khine Thu Kha told Reuters. "The high number of casualties occurred because the hospital took a direct hit."
A junta spokesman did not respond to calls for comment.
Myanmar has been gripped by conflict since the military suppressed protests against a 2021 coup that unseated the elected government led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.
The 300-bed hospital was overflowing with patients at the time of the strike, said aid worker Wai Hun Aung, as most healthcare services across swathes of Rakhine state have been suspended amid the ongoing fighting.
Hospital in ruins
On Thursday morning, the facility lay in complete ruins, with a collapsed roof, shattered columns and beams, and the bodies of victims laid out on the ground, according to images shared by Wai Hun Aung that he also posted on social media.
Reuters could not immediately verify the images.
"The remaining patients have been moved to a safe location," he told Reuters.
Soon after he heard the sound of explosions on Wednesday night, a 23-year-old resident of Mrauk U said he rushed to the site.
"When I arrived, the hospital was on fire," he said, asking not to be named because of security concerns. "I saw many bodies lying around and many injured people."
The junta, which has the only air force in Myanmar, has been increasingly using airstrikes to hit targets inside rebel-held areas.
From January to late November this year, the junta conducted 2,165 airstrikes, compared to 1,716 such incidents during the whole of 2024, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.
Resistance groups formed in the wake of the coup have combined with major ethnic armies like the Arakan Army to take on the military, which is fighting the rebellion on multiple frontlines.
Since the breakdown of a ceasefire in 2023, the Arakan Army has pushed the military out of 14 of Rakhine's 17 townships, gaining control of an area larger than Belgium, according to an analysis published by the ISEAS - Yusof Ishak Institute.
Mrauk-U township, located in the north of Rakhine state, has been under the control of the Arakan Army since last year and there has been no recent fighting in the area, Khine Thu Kha said.





